Technology: Difference between revisions
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[[Human]]s were among civlisations that eventually developed technology. The [[Second Doctor]] found that: | [[Human]]s were among civlisations that eventually developed technology. The [[Second Doctor]] found that: | ||
{{ | {{quote|At various points in its long and very varied history, the [[human|human race]] questions where it's going – what it might become. And, sometimes, they worry that they've come too far from whatever they were before. Every highly evolved [[industrialisation|industrial]] society, on every [[planet]], throughout [[history]], creates a group who reject that technology. Who choose to live a life outside the [[city|cities]], close to the earth. They might be [[religious]], [[politics|political]] – maybe they're just following a dream of ancestors. Looking for an [[Garden of Eden|Eden]]. I don't know. But they think it'll bring them closer to what it means to be human.|[[Second Doctor]]|All of Beyond (short story)}} | ||
[[Category:Technology| ]] | [[Category:Technology| ]] |
Revision as of 03:17, 20 September 2019
Technology were the tools used by a civilisation. According to Clarke's Law, "Any advanced form of technology is indistinguishable from magic." (TV: Battlefield)
The first Gallifreyan time machine, the Time Scaphe, was powered psychically rather than technologically. (PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible) The Archons claimed that the Time Lords didn't discover time travel for themselves, but developed it after they declared war on the Archons and stole their technology. (PROSE: The Nameless City)
The Neo-Technologists, led by Rassilon, rose to power on Gallifrey, overturning its matriarchal society based on magic and superstition. (PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible)
Humans were among civlisations that eventually developed technology. The Second Doctor found that:
At various points in its long and very varied history, the human race questions where it's going – what it might become. And, sometimes, they worry that they've come too far from whatever they were before. Every highly evolved industrial society, on every planet, throughout history, creates a group who reject that technology. Who choose to live a life outside the cities, close to the earth. They might be religious, political – maybe they're just following a dream of ancestors. Looking for an Eden. I don't know. But they think it'll bring them closer to what it means to be human.